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Records Management Responsibility
- 1. White Paper
Records Management
– Who is taking responsibility?
Sponsored by:
- 2. About this White Paper
As the non-profit association dedicated to nurturing, growing and supporting the ECM (Enterprise Content
Management) community, AIIM is proud to provide this research at no charge. In this way the education,
thought leadership and direction provided by our work can be leveraged by the entire community. Our objective
is to present the “wisdom of the crowds” based on our 55,000 strong community.
White Paper
We are happy to extend free use of the materials in this report to end-user companies and to independent
consultants, but not to suppliers of ECM, products and services, including scanning and capture, other than
ASG Software Solutions and its subsidiaries. Any use of this material must carry the attribution – “© AIIM 2009
www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com”
Rather than redistribute a copy of this report to your colleagues, we would prefer that you direct them to
www.aiim.org/research for a free download of their own.
Our ability to deliver such high-quality research is made possible by the financial support of our underwriting
sponsor, without whom we would have to return to a paid subscription model. For that, we hope you will join us
in thanking our underwriter for this support:
ASG Software Solutions,
1333 Third Avenue South,
Naples, FL 34102 USA
Phone: +1 800.932.5536
Fax: +1 239.435.2200
Email: sales@asg.com
www.asg.com
Records Management
About AIIM
- Who is taking responsibility?
AIIM (www.aiim.org) is the community that provides education, research, and best practices to help
organizations find, control and optimize their information. For more than 60 years, AIIM has been the leading non-
profit organization focused on helping users understand the challenges associated with managing documents,
content, records and business processes. Today, AIIM is international in scope, independent and
implementation-focused, acting as the intermediary between ECM (Enterprise Content Management) users,
vendors, and the channel.
About the author
Llewellyn Thomas is the principal of Albistur Consulting, a boutique consultancy specialising in information
strategy. Prior to Albistur Consulting he was the lead for content management in the BearingPoint U.K. Financial
Services practice and was the Director of Product Strategy at Hummingbird, since acquired by OpenText. He
assists leading organisations to define their digital and information strategies, as well as analysing the business
impact of content management and other knowledge management business disciplines and technologies. He is
a frequent speaker and contributor on information, content and knowledge management issues, and is a board
member of AIIM.
© 2009 © 2009
AIIM ASG Software Solutions
1100 Wayne Avenue, Suite 1100 1333 Third Avenue South
Silver Spring, MD 20910 USA Naples, FL 34102 USA
301.587.8202 800.932.5536
www.aiim.org www.asg.com
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 2
- 3. Table of Contents
About this White Paper: Assigning Responsibility:
White Paper
About this White Paper ...................... 2 Assigning Responsibility .................... 9
Process used and survey demographics ........ 2 Understand the organizational context............ 9
About AIIM........................................................ 2 Determine who has responsibility now ............ 9
About the author .............................................. 2 Agree on the scope of the role ........................ 9
Create job specification ................................. 10
Fill the role ...................................................... 10
Introduction:
Introduction ...................................... 4
The impact of poor records Conclusion and
management......................................4 Recommendation:
Unnecessary costs ...........................................4
Conclusion and recommendation ..... 11
Increased risk....................................................4
Underwritten in part by:
Changes are Emerging:
ASG Software Solutions ................................. 12
Changes are Emerging ...................... 5 AIIM ................................................................ 13
Records management is going to
Records Management
get more important .......................................... 5
New forms of information increase
- Who is taking responsibility?
complexity ........................................................ 5
Ever-increasing volumes of data...................... 5
“Findability” ...................................................... 5
A single view of records ................................... 6
Existing standards are becoming
out-of-date and unwieldy ..................................6
So, Who’s in Charge?:
So, Who’s in Charge? ........................ 7
Chief Records Officer........................................8
Legal / Compliance Function ............................8
IT Function.........................................................8
Line of Business................................................8
Split between Finance, Legal,
Records and IT..................................................8
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 3
- 4. Introduction
Records management has gained increasing prominence over the past few years. From high-profile court
cases, to new legislation and regulations, it has been dragged blinking from the archive basement where it
traditionally resided into the blinding spotlight of center stage. Electronic records management systems have
also matured, gaining in functionality and depth, and with adoption moving from government and regulated
White Paper
industries to all types of organizations, across all sectors.
Yet even with this new high profile, it is not at all clear who is responsible for the management and preservation
of the corporate memory or for the increasingly sophisticated mechanisms now available for managing
records. Given that poor records management can have a major impact on companies of all sizes, it is
important to understand who in the organization is taking responsibility.
In this white paper we will first review the impact of poor records management, and the emerging challenges
that records management faces. This will be followed by an analysis of who is currently responsible – and who
should be responsible. Finally, we will describe a process to ensure that organizations put the right person in
charge.
The impact of poor records management
Poor records management can have major impacts on the organization:
G Unnecessary Costs
Inadequate filing and indexing of information for future retrieval creates unnecessary costs as staff waste
valuable time trying to find information. Poor filing can also impact the time required to respond to
customers, regulators and lawyers.
Poor records management also has the effect of increasing the proportion of office space used for storage.
The systematic disposal of records, as required by proper records management policies and processes,
Records Management
not only avoids costly paper accumulation, but also frees valuable floor space. For the same reason, without
due separation into working documents for deletion and records for retention, disk, tape, and other digital
storage is wasted as unnecessary information collects on the infrastructure.
- Who is taking responsibility?
G Increased Risk
Poor records management has an impact on the risk profile of an organization. Increasingly, organizations
are being asked to produce documents to demonstrate regulatory and legislative compliance. The inability
to produce documents – and do so quickly – can have grave results, as demonstrated by a number of
recent high-profile court cases and company collapses.
The specific risk of poor records management with regard to litigation is threefold: it may result in accidental
or premature destruction of relevant information which could be important to the outcome; records that
cannot immediately be found might be “undeclared” yet turn out to be discoverable; and there may be
records that could or should have been destroyed, but still exist.
A further risk arises from an organization’s lack of resilience in the event of business disruption or natural
disaster. Poor records management practices could leave the business without access to the corporate
knowledge base.
Conversely, good records management is associated with significant cost reductions and risk mitigation. In
today’s tough business environment, where many firms are decreasing costs through headcount reductions
and business reorganization, it is ironic that they are not investing to save in the long term via resilient records
management processes and systems.
However, the environment in which records management processes occur is not static. Changes in society
and technology are bringing new challenges.
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 4
- 5. Challenges are Emerging
The context in which records management occurs – technology, economy and society – has been evolving at a
great rate. Examples of this are increasing digitisation, more frequent bouts of economic instability, and
increasing use of the Internet for social means. Social, government and legal frameworks, including those of
records management, have been slow to adjust to these changes. There currently exist some major challenges
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that records management must address:
G Records management is going to get more important
Without a doubt, there is more regulation coming, and with it an increased requirement for sophisticated
records management. In financial services, there are likely to be significant increases in regulatory
requirements, with a strong focus on accountability and transparency, from monitoring of liquidity risk, to
tracking the payment of bonuses. Increasing government intervention in other industries will mean greater
accountability and closer scrutiny as well, with the associated requirement for records management. An
example of this is the current focus on healthcare provisioning in the US. Security concerns will also trigger
a range of new regulations relating to the capture, maintenance, and disposal of key information assets,
both within and across differing organizations.
G New forms of information increase complexity
The types of information that need to be managed as records are also evolving as part of the increasing
digitisation of society. New information formats on the Internet are created rapidly and are no longer based
on single stand-alone files:
H Websites - although now considered quite mature technology, traditional records management has
always had an issue with websites due to the composite nature of web pages.
H Blogs - in many organizations, blogs are becoming increasingly popular; these are now often used as
broadcast emails which the recipient signs up to receive, rather than the sender selecting who to send
to. As with websites, the key issues are the composite nature of the page, the constantly changing list of
Records Management
recipients, and the dynamic, collaborative nature of the post and comments.
H Wikis – similarly, wikis are becoming popular to communicate key operational information in many
organizations. The issue with wikis is that they are truly collaborative; there is generally no owner, data is
- Who is taking responsibility?
often composite, and they are never static.
H Messaging – to date, phone, instant messaging and short message service/text have been very poorly
managed, even though they have been around for quite a few years.
H Social 2.0 – increasingly, the lives of people are moving online and into new digital spaces. Photos,
videos, conversations, status updates, and messaging are now all provided through a range of social
sites such as Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. Is a marketing message or a company comment posted on
an official Facebook or Twitter location a record? If so – and it probably is – how do you manage it?
Figure 1: Information types
FAX EMAIL HTML XML BLOGS WIKIS RSS FEEDS
PRESENTATIONS SPREADSHEET LETTER RECORD GIF PNG JPEG TIFF
VIDEO VOICE PROCESS CHART DRAWINGS MAPS PROJECT PLAN PDF
PostScript PCL AFP Text DJDE
Financial Report Customer Statement
Consumer Bill
ard
itC
ed
Cr
tCard
Credi
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 5
- 6. G Ever-increasing volumes of data
The increase in ‘traditional’ information, such as documents, images and spreadsheets is obvious, but we
must also consider the reports, application output and communications recordings that have not
traditionally been seen as ‘must haves’ for records management. These are perhaps the most overlooked
record types, and are often some of the most voluminous.
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Financial reports and other accounting records, statements, or any other kinds of information presented to
customers are some examples of massively- and frequently-produced records. In most cases, these have
been out of sight of a traditional records management practice and are only now being included due to
regulatory requirements. In many cases, these items are produced by legacy operational systems which
increase the difficulty of homogenising access.
G “Findability”
The flood of new information objects is accompanied by the challenge of establishing a uniformity of
metadata across very different data types to ensure that data is both findable and manageable. The
emerging discipline of Enterprise Data Management or Enterprise Content Governance has set as its goal
the maintenance of consistent data quality across the organization, both for compliance and for knowledge
management.
G A single view of records
With the increasing importance of records management, the need to have a single view of records is
becoming more urgent. The ability to go to a single interface to apply a litigation hold or carry out a
discovery search is becoming a daily requirement. However, this is a significant challenge; records are
frequently stored in many different locations and on different systems – and interfaces are often
incompatible.
One approach that is gaining traction is that of ‘manage in place’. This is an emerging area, where the
technology is still evolving with little standardisation as yet, and with much use of custom links and
integration. A template-matching approach is often used to impose standard policies to common data types
Records Management
across different systems. Again, the challenge of mismatched metadata and data harmonisation becomes
an issue when implementing a single view of records across multiple repositories.
- Who is taking responsibility?
G Existing standards are becoming out-of-date and unwieldy
In response to the new information formats and regulations, existing standards, with their cultural and
technological baggage, are being extended, enhanced and stretched. Although the principles of records
management still apply, it is the technological and approach-specific policies that are being stretched and
twisted. As a general rule, these policies are fundamentally based around a paper-based view of
information. The policies need to be updated or even rewritten to deal with the new forms of information and
the huge increase in volumes. Is it any wonder that an organization processing more than 6 million pages
per day decides that a file plan is an oppressive management overhead and therefore unnecessary? Or that
another organization only working with collaborative electronic documents decides that the idea of
‘declaration’ is unworkable and focuses on document lifecycles instead?
The records management discipline needs to develop baseline, digitally-focused policies in the context of
the way information is now stored, accessed, and managed – while taking the large volumes and
automated nature of information creation into consideration. Policies need to adjust to the fundamental
difference in character between electronic information and physical information.
Given these emerging challenges, records management is increasingly becoming a more sophisticated and
complex function that requires formal leadership.
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 6
- 7. So, Who’s in Charge?
Currently, the records management responsibility is not definitively owned by any one role in an organization.
The 2009 AIIM Survey on Records Management1 found that responsibility for records management is scattered
all over the organization. It can be found in the executive suite, with Finance, with the corporate secretary, with
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Legal, with lines of business, and with IT. This distribution over the organization is common to both physical
and electronic records. When it comes to physical and paper records, unsurprisingly, there is a definite bias
towards the lines of business and/or Legal carrying the responsibility. However, responsibility for electronic
records leans strongly towards IT.
The key to understanding this scattering of responsibility across disparate groups is the size of the
organization. Many organizations, particularly smaller ones, do not have specifically-defined records
management activities, as regulatory or operational requirements have not forced the organization into the
creation of distinct and enforced policies. As they do not have specifically-defined records management
activities, they are unlikely to have individuals specifically charged with managing records. On the other hand,
larger organizations most certainly will have created identifiable records management teams and activities
relating to the maintenance and preservation of information – usually as a response to either regulatory or
operational concerns. And, with the possible exception of government, these activities were always treated as
an ancillary function. As such, different persons within the organization would have assumed the responsibility
for these activities.
Figure 2: Which of the following would best apply in your organization as regards
the highest level of records management expertise and responsibility for paper/electronic records?
(AIIM RM Survey, August 2009, N=553)
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30%
Records Management
We have a Chief Records Officer at
Execu ve Level
We have a Records Officer who reports
- Who is taking responsibility?
to the CFO
We have a Records Officer who reports
to the Corporate Secretary
Resides within Finance
Paper/Physical
Resides within Risk/Compliance
Electronic
Resides within Legal
Resides within the IT Department
Records Management is devolved to
Line of Business units
We have nobody with specific
responsibility for these records
Other
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 7
- 8. In today’s organizational environment, what are the different roles that could have responsibility?
G Chief Records Officer
One role that has started to appear is that of the Chief Records Officer. The role generally is a member of
the executive team who has responsibility for records management, working alongside the CIO and the
legal function. Not unsurprisingly, Chief Records Officer roles are starting to appear in government,
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including the North Carolina Archives, the US Surface Transportation Board, and the University of Alaska.
There are also some forward-looking law and financial services firms that have adopted such a role.
G Legal / Compliance Function
The legal and compliance functions have begun picking up more and more responsibility over the past few
years for records management, as records management is closely related to the implementation of the
policies that the legal function generally recommend. In many financial services firms, the responsibility for
records management is increasingly finding its way to the legal and compliance function as eager young
lawyers differentiate themselves by specialising in records management. It has been commented that this
trend is very similar to what happened with the discipline of operational risk, which moved from a hidden
back office function to increasing prominence during the 1990s, and is now enshrined in compliance
through Basel 2.
G IT Function
Historically, the IT function has had responsibility for electronic records. This is no surprise as most of the
records now are held in electronic form, and in many organizations the IT function owns not only the IT
systems, but also by default the data and records that are captured in these systems. However, the IT
function may not fully appreciate or understand the value or the retention requirements that apply to that
data. It has been said that giving the electronic records management responsibility to IT because records
reside on IT-managed systems is akin to giving the facilities manager control of paper records because they
are stored in his basement.
Records Management
G Line of Business
Devolving the responsibility to Lines of Business is a technique used to “assign” the records management
processes into day-to-day operations. In reality, Lines of Business generally view records management as
an ancillary function, to be delegated where possible, and in which records management processes are
- Who is taking responsibility?
sidelined in favor of more strategic goals. An example of this is a global universal bank where the
responsibility for records management was originally allocated to the leader of the individual business units.
Unsurprisingly, the responsibility was often granted to individual teams with as few as four or five members;
this usually resulted in one person carrying the burden of all day-to-day records management in addition to
their original responsibilities. Although not an optimum scenario, this did mean that the people who knew
the records best were the ones managing them on a daily basis.
G Split between Finance, Legal, Records and IT
In this model, there is no specific role with responsibility for records management. Instead, records
management is split across various functions with no one person having accountability. This is the worst of
the approaches currently observed – with key operational decisions either not being made, or being
assumed erroneously by the wrong party. One example is a large government agency where the front office
department was responsible for capturing and entering the records into the system. The Legal department
was charged with verifying that the records complied with all regulatory requirements, while the IT
organization was to maintain the system where the records were held. However, it transpired that no one
really was responsible for the maintenance of the data, and issues started to arise when an internal review
by the audit department identified that key records were automatically destroyed every year when customer
data was updated, instead of being retained for the legal minimum as required by law.
This range of roles underlines the cross-organizational nature of records management: it is part legal, part
information technology, part risk and compliance, part operational and part art.
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 8
- 9. Assigning Responsibility
So, how should an organization assign responsibility for records management?
Authority is of primary importance for any role with responsibility for records management. Records
management is inherently cross-organizational; therefore, there is a necessary level of authority that is required
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in order to ensure that records management is implemented and maintained. The particular “grade” or “level”
the role is granted will be dependent on the organization, after careful consideration of its specific records
management requirements. However, there is no additional structural requirement for the role, as it will be
particular to the organizational operations, corporate culture, and industry.
In order to effectively allocate responsibility, there are a number of key steps an organization needs to
consider:
G Understand the organizational context
The first element an organization should consider is to build an understanding of the organizational context
in which records management is required. Key issues for an organization are:
H What are the current policies?
H How are policies applied? By whom, when?
H How are policies enforced? By whom, when?
H How many recognised records are there today?
H What high volume or hidden records are there?
H Where are records stored?
H What level of records automation is there?
H What systems are there?
H How are records processes integrated into operational processes?
Records Management
Understanding these issues is often done in conjunction with a records management systems
implementation.
- Who is taking responsibility?
G Determine who has responsibility now
Once an organization has determined the context, and very often during the process of determining the
context, it is important to understand who currently has responsibility. This understanding helps to highlight
the current relative importance of records management within the organization. It also helps to determine
the power and authority attributes that would be required to create an effective leadership role for records
management. Organizations should consider cultural, formal, and informal perspectives when evaluating
the role.
G Agree on the scope of the role
Once an organization understands the organizational context and has identified those currently responsible
for records management, then it can begin to formulate what the scope of the new role is. Key issues to
consider are:
H To whom will the role report?
H What will be the relationship with Legal?
H What will be the relationship with IT?
H What supporting roles should the role have?
H Should the role have real or “persuasive” authority?
H Who will have responsibility for aligning operational processes with records processes?
H What will be the relationship to the day-to-day users?
H How will compensation and incentives be aligned?
Scoping out the role is a crucial step before defining the job specification, as it ensures that the parameters
of what is required in the organization are defined before the required skills and competences are identified.
If this scoping exercise is not completed first, an organization runs the risk of creating a job specification
which does not meet the organization’s requirements.
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 9
- 10. G Create the job specification
Once the organization understands the scope of the records management responsibility, then it needs to
define the job specification. Particular focus should be placed on the skills required and the importance of
such skills to the organization. Required skills may involve the following:
H Political and cultural adeptness
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The need to align, organize, and guide differing (and often conflicting) needs, requirements and
demands within the organization is a key attribute. This ability to manage influence, survive politics,
secure funding, and work within the culture of an organization is vital to gaining acceptance and adoption
of records management principles and policies in a timely fashion.
H Understands information processes and context
Understanding the key information and records processes, and the context in which information and
records are created, used, managed and destroyed is vital. Knowing how information is used underpins
the effective formulation and maintenance of effective policies and records management systems and
tools, such as taxonomies and metadata models.
H Records management competence
It is equally important to have a comprehensive understanding of key records management principles,
policies and standards with knowledge of how they are applied to differing information types, processes
and systems. Although it seems a given, it is also crucial to understand the importance of records
management to the organization, in context of regulatory and operational requirements.
H Awareness of the legal and regulatory environment
The legislative and regulatory environments of the organization are key inputs into the foundation of
records management policies; a solid understanding is vital to be able to effectively formulate and
maintain policies and records management systems. This can be especially important in companies
operating across multiple jurisdictions, where the records management regulatory requirements of a host
country may be more onerous – or simply very different – than those of the home country. For example,
during the implementation of MiFID (Markets in Financial Instruments Directive) across its European
Business Units, one US-based firm found it was subject to twelve different regulatory requirements, one
Records Management
for each of the European countries in which it operated.
H Information Technology Skills
Finally, it is highly advantageous to understand the “art of the possible” in relation to information
- Who is taking responsibility?
technology and records management. Not only is an increasing quantity of information now in digital
form, but any solution to an organization’s records management challenges will involve some element of
technology. This is especially important in financial services, where institutions must be able to provide
up to 5 years of historical records of their daily transactions – typically in a very short amount of time.
Once the critical skills have been identified, they need to be prioritised to enable the role to be filled.
G Fill the role
Once the job specification has been created, then the organization needs to look both internally and
externally for a person to fill the role. It is likely that no candidates will provide a complete match, in which
case consideration should be given to those skill sets that might be acquired through training versus those
that are more likely to be based on experience and personality.
These steps are crucial to ensuring that the records management role is adequately specified. The right
person can then be hired for the right role.
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 10
- 11. Conclusion and Recommendation
At present, there is no definite trend as to where records management responsibility lies - it is spread out
across the organization. However, the challenges of increasing volumes of information, newly-emerging forms
of information, ever-increasing quantities of regulation, the need for a single view of records, and a re-
evaluation of the current standards, means that there needs to be a single role in the organization with
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responsibility for records management.
The ideal role to take records management responsibility must have sufficient authority in the organization to
enforce records management procedures and policies, while requiring an individual who has political and
cultural adeptness, an understanding of information processes and context, a background in records
management, awareness of the legal and regulatory environment, and with appropriate information technology
skills. Finding such individuals may be a difficult task, and organizations have taken all manner of approaches
to solve this dilemma.
Records management in the organization is improving – electronic records management is definitely catching-
up with physical records management. But this is no excuse for complacency. Organizations need to start
thinking through the steps mentioned above and not only identify who is currently managing their records
today, but determine who should be responsible for their records in the future.
References
1. “Industry Watch: Electronic Records Management – still playing catch up with paper” published by AIIM,
September 2009, free to download at www.aiim.org.uk/research
Records Management
- Who is taking responsibility?
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 11
- 12. ASG provides software solutions to more than 85 percent of the world’s largest companies. Through its
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comprehensive Business Service Management (BSM) solution, Business Service Portfolio™, ASG is an
established BSM provider with a strong heritage in metadata management; information management;
applications management; infrastructure, performance and operations management; and service and support
technologies. ASG enables clients to reduce costs, improve business-service delivery, and reduce risks.
Founded in 1986, ASG is a privately held company based in Naples, Florida, USA, with more than 90 offices
worldwide.
A cornerstone of ASG’s content management portfolio is the ASG-Mobius suite of solutions, which enables
users of all skill levels to quickly and easily access, manage, and own essential business information,
identifying key content management trends at all levels of the organization. The suite includes a complete set
of specialized solutions including:
ASG-ViewDirect® is a powerful solution for enterprise archiving and records management. With its
foundation as the ‘repository of record,’ it captures, stores, and links content, in any format, from any source,
and delivers it throughout your enterprise. With ASG-ViewDirect, end-users can obtain mission-critical content,
regardless of the source, through their preferred delivery method, while IT meets corporate requirements for
authenticated access and data lifecycle management. In addition to functioning as a long-term archive, the
ASG-ViewDirect repository is also a real-time engine for Web delivery of document-based content. These
capabilities combine to deliver the unlimited scalability, flexibility, and interoperability necessary to unlock the
value of your enterprise’s information.
ASG-DocumentDirect® for the Internet and ASG-e-Search & View are thin, out-of-the-box viewing
clients which provide an easy-to-use search engine for enterprise-wide content searches, and a customizable,
folder-based interface for end-user content management.
Records Management
ASG-Total Content Integrator™ (TCI) incorporates authentication, federated search, index normalization,
and content transformation services. ASG-TCI also provides an optional module, ASG-TCI for MOSS, to
integrate and augment the capabilities of Microsoft® Office SharePoint® Server (MOSS) 2007.
- Who is taking responsibility?
ASG-ViewDirect® E-mail Manager is a complete email management solution based on the world’s most
powerful content repository. ASG-ViewDirect E-mail Manager captures, archives, indexes and applies retention
to email from user mailboxes or from journal capture points. This solution helps to facilitate compliance with
internal policies and regulations, while minimizing legal risks and costs associated with e-discovery.
ASG-WorkflowDirect® provides process automation to integrate content with business processes, people
and computer systems, while coordinating, managing, automating, and measuring content-centric processes
independent of underlying applications.
ASG-Records Manager provides a full life-cycle management capability for all electronic records in their
original format, including holds, automatic folder structures, and advanced retention, with parametric events
that automatically executes from line-of-business applications through standard Web Services. ASG-Records
Manager is a specialized solution for managing records in high-volume environments. Classification, retention
and disposition management activities can be automatically performed or coordinated by authorized users
depending on individual record type requirements.
ASG Software Solutions
1333 Third Avenue South
Naples, FL 34102 USA
Phone: +1.800.932.5536
Fax: +1.239.435.2200
E-mail: sales@asg.com
Web: www.asg.com
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 12
- 13. White Paper
Records Management
- Who is taking responsibility?
AIIM (www.aiim.org) is the community that provides education, research, and best practices to help
organizations find, control, and optimize their information.
For over 60 years, AIIM has been the leading non-profit organization focused on helping users to
understand the challenges associated with managing documents, content, records, and business
processes. Today, AIIM is international in scope, independent, implementation-focused, and, as the
representative of the entire ECM industry - including users, suppliers, and the channel—acts as the
industry’s intermediary.
© 2009 © 2009
AIIM AIIM Europe
1100 Wayne Avenue, Suite 1100 The IT Centre, Lowesmoor Wharf
Silver Spring, MD 20910 Worcester, WR1 2RR, UK
301.587.8202 +44 (0)1905 727600
www.aiim.org www.aiim.eu
© AIIM 2009 www.aiim.org / © ASG Software Solutions 2009 www.asg.com 13